Samsung’s foldable now has a name, the Samsung Galaxy Fold, and
the company is revealing more about what this unique smartphone
can do. Samsung is planning to launch the Galaxy Fold on April
26th, starting at $1,980. There will be both an LTE and 5G version
of the Galaxy Fold, and Samsung is even planning on launching the
device in Europe on May 3rd, starting at 2,000 euros.

Samsung is using a new 7.3-inch Infinity Flex Display that allows
the phone itself to have a tablet-sized screen that can be folded
to fit into a pocket. The main display is QXGA+ resolution
(4.2:3), and when it’s folded, a smaller 4.6-inch HD+ (12:9)
display is used for the phone mode.

I remember when I got a hard time for suggesting it would be a good thing for an iPhone model to start at $1,500. A starting price of $1,980 is eye catching, for sure, but as I’ve been arguing for years, we accept the fact that pro laptops costs $2,000 or more, so why not $2,000 phones, when for so many people, the phone is by far their most-used and most important computing device? (Not to mention their primary camera.)

But I look at the Galaxy Fold and I still see a prototype. It looks terrible when folded — a thick device with a tiny display with huge forehead and chin. Clearly the two modes are not equals — the primary mode is open, and folded is an afterthought. And even in tablet mode, there’s a weird off-center notch in the corner. It just seems clunky.